The Arizona Republic

Calif. buildings still in peril from tumbling cliff

-

SAN CLEMENTE, Calif. – About two dozen people forced to flee Southern California apartment buildings endangered by a tumbling oceanside hill may be evacuated indefinite­ly.

Three clifftop apartment buildings and one nearby building in coastal Orange County’s San Clemente were redtagged and evacuated Wednesday when the land began to shift and slide away from their backyards down a hillside following torrential rains.

Residents were warned Thursday that they may not be allowed back for a while. Authoritie­s said there was no timetable for declaring the slope stable enough for residents to return.

“I think everyone should understand we have a dynamic situation here,” Mayor Chris Duncan said during a news conference. “We have another rainstorm coming, the ground is continuing to move, so these structures are still in peril.”

The National Weather Service said heavy rain could hit Southern California again early next week.

Twenty to 30 residents were evacuated. Some were briefly allowed back home on Thursday to move out their belongings.

Orange County was added to a presidenti­al emergency declaratio­n for areas hard-hit by natural disasters.

About 35 out of 58 California counties are now covered by the declaratio­n, which authorizes federal assistance to help state and local government­s deal with a series of fierce winter storms.

California has been hit with 11 atmospheri­c rivers in a virtually nonstop series that has sparked floods and landslides, toppled trees, stranded mountain dwellers in historical­ly deep snow and downed power lines, leaving thousands without electricit­y.

Orange County Supervisor Katrina Foley said the county had seen more than $4 million in storm damage, and the figure will escalate.

In the city of La Habra, news reports said a sinkhole about 30 feet deep opened up Wednesday night next to another sinkhole that opened up in 2019 after heavy rain. Repairs to the earlier hole have yet to be completed.

Some Southern California beaches were closed as heavy rain overwhelme­d sewage systems and sent thousands of gallons of raw sewage to the sea.

 ?? MARIO TAMA/GETTY IMAGES ?? A hillside landslide brought on by heavy rains caused four oceanview apartment buildings to be evacuated and shuttered due to unstable conditions, on Thursday in San Clemente, Calif.
MARIO TAMA/GETTY IMAGES A hillside landslide brought on by heavy rains caused four oceanview apartment buildings to be evacuated and shuttered due to unstable conditions, on Thursday in San Clemente, Calif.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States